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Featured researches published by Ruchi Jain.


Microbiology | 2008

Important role of the nucleotide excision repair pathway in Mycobacterium smegmatis in conferring protection against commonly encountered DNA-damaging agents

Krishna Kurthkoti; Pradeep Kumar; Ruchi Jain; Umesh Varshney

Mycobacteria are an important group of human pathogens. Although the DNA repair mechanisms in mycobacteria are not well understood, these are vital for the pathogens persistence in the host macrophages. In this study, we generated a null mutation in the uvrB gene of Mycobacterium smegmatis to allow us to compare the significance of the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway with two important base excision repair pathways, initiated by uracil DNA glycosylase (Ung) and formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (Fpg or MutM), in an isogenic strain background. The strain deficient in NER was the most sensitive to commonly encountered DNA-damaging agents such as UV, low pH, reactive oxygen species, hypoxia, and was also sensitive to acidified nitrite. Taken together with previous observations on NER-deficient M. tuberculosis, these results suggest that NER is an important DNA repair pathway in mycobacteria.


Microbiology | 2010

A distinct physiological role of MutY in mutation prevention in mycobacteria

Krishna Kurthkoti; Thiruneelakantan Srinath; Pradeep Kumar; Vidyasagar Malshetty; Pau Biak Sang; Ruchi Jain; Ramanathapuram Manjunath; Umesh Varshney

Oxidative damage to DNA results in the occurrence of 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) in the genome. In eubacteria, repair of such damage is initiated by two major base-excision repair enzymes, MutM and MutY. We generated a MutY-deficient strain of Mycobacterium smegmatis to investigate the role of this enzyme in DNA repair. The MutY deficiency in M. smegmatis did not result in either a noteworthy susceptibility to oxidative stress or an increase in the mutation rate. However, rifampicin-resistant isolates of the MutY-deficient strain showed distinct mutations in the rifampicin-resistance-determining region of rpoB. Besides the expected C to A (or G to T) mutations, an increase in A to C (or T to G) mutations was also observed. Biochemical characterization of mycobacterial MutY (M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis) revealed an expected excision of A opposite 8-oxoG in DNA. Additionally, excision of G and T opposite 8-oxoG was detected. MutY formed complexes with DNA containing 8-oxoG : A, 8-oxoG : G or 8-oxoG : T but not 8-oxoG : C pairs. Primer extension reactions in cell-free extracts of M. smegmatis suggested error-prone incorporation of nucleotides into the DNA. Based on these observations, we discuss the physiological role of MutY in specific mutation prevention in mycobacteria.


Microbiology | 2010

Synergistic effects of UdgB and Ung in mutation prevention and protection against commonly encountered DNA damaging agents in Mycobacterium smegmatis

Vidyasagar Malshetty; Ruchi Jain; Thiruneelakantan Srinath; Krishna Kurthkoti; Umesh Varshney

The incorporation of dUMP during replication or the deamination of cytosine in DNA results in the occurrence of uracils in genomes. To maintain genomic integrity, uracil DNA glycosylases (UDGs) excise uracil from DNA and initiate the base-excision repair pathway. Here, we cloned, purified and biochemically characterized a family 5 UDG, UdgB, from Mycobacterium smegmatis to allow us to use it as a model organism to investigate the physiological significance of the novel enzyme. Studies with knockout strains showed that compared with the wild-type parent, the mutation rate of the udgB( -) strain was approximately twofold higher, whereas the mutation rate of a strain deficient in the family 1 UDG (ung(- )) was found to be approximately 8.4-fold higher. Interestingly, the mutation rate of the double-knockout (ung(-)/ udgB(-)) strain was remarkably high, at approximately 19.6-fold. While CG to TA mutations predominated in the ung(-) and ung(-)/udgB(-) strains, AT to GC mutations were enhanced in the udgB(-) strain. The ung(-)/udgB(-) strain was notably more sensitive to acidified nitrite and hydrogen peroxide stresses compared with the single knockouts (ung(-) or udgB(-)). These observations reveal a synergistic effect of UdgB and Ung in DNA repair, and could have implications for the generation of attenuated strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.


European Journal of Cell Biology | 2016

ERK activated by Histamine H1 receptor is anti-proliferative through spatial restriction in the cytosol

Ruchi Jain; Uchenna Watson; Deepak Kumar Saini

Histamine, a primary mediator of allergic responses, elicits its effects by activating specific receptors belonging to the GPCR family in target cells. Activation of histamine receptor can activate MAP kinases as recorded by monitoring the phosphorylation of extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK). Despite this, ERK phosphorylation does not translate into pro-proliferative changes after histamine stimulation in HeLa cells. Here we show that histamine H1 receptor activation mediates MAPK activation through PLCβ, Src, PKCδ and MEK pathway, but does not lead to nuclear relocalization of phospho-ERK (pERK), classically associated with pro-proliferative changes. Live cell imaging, FRET and FRAP measurements along with functional analysis reveal that pERK generated by histamine activation is physically and functionally restricted in the cytosol and the findings report a spatial regulation of MAPK cascade activated non-canonically through GPCRs unlike its canonical activation by EGF.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2017

Water-Soluble Pd8L4 Self-assembled Molecular Barrel as an Aqueous Carrier for Hydrophobic Curcumin

Imtiyaz Ahmad Bhat; Ruchi Jain; Mujahuddin M. Siddiqui; Deepak Kumar Saini; Partha Sarathi Mukherjee

A tetrafacial water-soluble molecular barrel (1) was synthesized by coordination driven self-assembly of a symmetrical tetrapyridyl donor (L) with a cis-blocked 90° acceptor [cis-(en)Pd(NO3)2] (en = ethane-1,2-diamine). The open barrel structure of (1) was confirmed by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The presence of a hydrophobic cavity with large windows makes it an ideal candidate for encapsulation and carrying hydrophobic drug like curcumin in an aqueous medium. The barrel (1) encapsulates curcumin inside its molecular cavity and protects highly photosensitive curcumin from photodegradation. The photostability of encapsulated curcumin is due to the absorption of a high proportion of the incident photons by the aromatic walls of 1 with a high absorption cross-sectional area, which helps the walls to shield the guest even against sunlight/UV radiations. As compared to free curcumin in water, we noticed a significant increase in solubility as well as cellular uptake of curcumin upon encapsulation inside the water-soluble molecular barrel (1) in aqueous medium. Fluorescence imaging confirmed that curcumin was delivered into HeLa cancer cells by the aqueous barrel (1) with the retention of its potential anticancer activity. While free curcumin is inactive toward cancer cells in aqueous medium at room temperature due to negligible solubility, the determined IC50 value of ∼14 μM for curcumin in aqueous medium in the presence of the barrel (1) reflects the efficiency of the barrel as a potential curcumin carrier in aqueous medium without any other additives. Thus, two major challenges of increasing the bioavailability and stability of curcumin in aqueous medium even in the presence of UV light have been addressed by using a new supramolecular water-soluble barrel (1) as a drug carrier.


Molecular Biotechnology | 2014

Matrix-Assisted Refolding, Purification and Activity Assessment Using a ‘Form Invariant’ Assay for Matrix Metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2)

Krishna Kumar Singh; Ruchi Jain; Harini Ramanan; Deepak Kumar Saini

Matrix metalloproteinases expression is used as biomarker for various cancers and associated malignancies. Since these proteinases can cleave many intracellular proteins, overexpression tends to be toxic; hence, a challenge to purify them. To overcome these limitations, we designed a protocol where full length pro-MMP2 enzyme was overexpressed in E. coli as inclusion bodies and purified using 6xHis affinity chromatography under denaturing conditions. In one step, the enzyme was purified and refolded directly on the affinity matrix under redox conditions to obtain a bioactive protein. The pro-MMP2 protein was characterized by mass spectrometry, CD spectroscopy, zymography and activity analysis using a simple in-house developed ‘form invariant’ assay, which reports the total MMP2 activity independent of its various forms. The methodology yielded higher yields of bioactive protein compared to other strategies reported till date, and we anticipate that using the protocol, other toxic proteins can also be overexpressed and purified from E. coli and subsequently refolded into active form using a one step renaturation protocol.


bioRxiv | 2018

Correlation between the aberrant human testicular germ-cell gene expression and disruption of spermatogenesis leading to male infertility

Arka Baksi; Ruchi Jain; Ravi Manjithaya; Vasan S S; Pataru Kondaiah; Rajan R. Dighe

Spermatogenesis is characterized by sequential gene-expression at precise stages in progression of differentiation of the germ cells. Any alteration in expression of the critical genes is responsible for arrest of spermatogenesis associated with infertility. Inspite of advances the differential gene expression accompanying spermatogenesis, the corresponding regulatory mechanisms and their correlation to human infertility have not been clearly established. This study aims to identify the gene expression pattern of the human testicular germ cells from the patients either with obstructive azoospermia with complete intra-testicular spermatogenesis or non-obstructive azoospermia with spermatogenesis arrested at different stages and correlate the same to infertility. The testicular transcriptomes of 3 OA and 8 NOA patients and pooled testicular RNA (commercial source) were analyzed for their differential gene expression to identify potential regulators of spermatogenesis and the results were further validated in all of the 44 patients clinically diagnosed with azoospermia undergoing sperm retrieval surgery over the study period and 4 control samples included in this study. Analyses of the differential transcriptome led to identification of genes enriched in a specific testicular cell type and subsequently, several regulators of the diploid-double-diploid-haploid transitions in the human spermatogenesis were identified. Perturbations in the expression of these genes were identified as the potential causes of the spermatogenic arrest seen in azoospermia and thus the potential mediators of human male infertility. Another interesting observation was the increased autophagy in the testes of patients with non-obstructive azoospermia. The present study suggests that the regulation of the diploid-double-diploid-haploid transition is multigenic with the tandem alteration of several genes resulting in infertility. In conclusion, this study identified some of the genetic regulators controlling spermatogenesis using comparative transcriptome analyses of testicular tissues from azoospremic individuals and showed how alterations in several genes results in disruption of spermatogenesis and subsequent infertility. This study also provides interesting insights into the gene expression patterns of the Indian population that were not available earlier.


Archive | 2018

ERK Activation Pathways Downstream of GPCRs

Ruchi Jain; Uchenna Watson; Lakshmi Vasudevan; Deepak Kumar Saini

GPCRs, the 7-TM receptors, represent a class of cell surface receptors which modulate a variety of physiological responses. The serpentine structure in addition to contributing the diversity of stimuli these receptors can sense also provides flexibility to the extracellular and intracellular regions where other proteins can interact with and can form functionally active multimeric entities. The range in signaling and physiological responses generated by these receptors can be attributed to a large repertoire of the receptor subtypes as well as their differential coupling to various classes of G-protein subunits and other proteins which facilitate multistate activation. A multistate GPCR can engage diverse signaling molecules, thereby modulating not only the canonical cellular responses but also noncanonical responses typically associated with activation of other cascades such as RTK and MAPK/ERK signaling. Given the crucial involvement of MAP kinase/ERK signaling in cell fate determination specially with respect to regulating cell proliferation, cellular apoptosis, and survival, GPCR-mediated cross-activation of MAPK has been explored in various systems and shown to involve functional integration of multiple pathways. This review describes the present knowledge of the different mechanisms of ERK activation downstream of GPCRs and our present understanding of receptor-dependent and -independent MAPK activation cascades.


Archive | 2018

Spatiotemporal Modulation of ERK Activation by GPCRs

Uchenna Watson; Ruchi Jain; Suramya Asthana; Deepak Kumar Saini

ERK1/2 (extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases) are the nodal proteins that regulate diverse cellular functions primarily in response to activation from receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs). Not only is ERK activated through a variety of RTKs, but noncanonical signaling through GPCRs also activates them. Such multimodal activation allows appropriate integration of many inputs to critical cell fate decisions such as proliferation and differentiation that MAP kinases typically regulate. MAP kinases also regulate many polar responses such as apoptosis and proliferation, dedifferentiation-differentiation, and the diversity in the outcomes though the same terminal molecule can be explained based on differences in the activation dynamics and rates. However, two processes have now been established as drivers for most of the diversity recorded in the outcomes of MAP kinase signaling. These parameters are cellular compartmentalization, i.e., spatial confinement of the molecules participating in a pathway and changes in the kinetics of the activation-deactivation, i.e., temporal regulation. While phosphorylation is the key to activating responses, specifically for ERK, the terminal MAP kinase, it is the spatiotemporal dynamics that governs the outcome generated by it. This chapter reviews our present understanding of the spatial and temporal regulation of MAP kinase cascade and the ERK activity, specifically through GPCRs.


DNA Repair | 2007

A distinct role of formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (MutM) in down-regulation of accumulation of G, C mutations and protection against oxidative stress in mycobacteria

Ruchi Jain; Pradeep Kumar; Umesh Varshney

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Deepak Kumar Saini

Indian Institute of Science

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Umesh Varshney

Indian Institute of Science

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Krishna Kurthkoti

Indian Institute of Science

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Pradeep Kumar

Indian Institute of Science

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Uchenna Watson

Indian Institute of Science

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Harini Ramanan

Indian Institute of Science

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